Longford produced mainly oats, potatoes and butter and had ‘scarcely any manufactures’. There were ‘few resident noblemen or gentry of large estates’ and ‘few parts of Ireland in which persons of limited income’ could ‘live cheaper or better’. The principal market towns were Ballymahon, Colehill and Edgeworthstown, and the disfranchised boroughs of Granard, Lanesborough, St. Johnstown and Longford, the venue for county elections.
At the 1820 general election Forbes and Fetherston offered again with Lady Rosse’s support. White, who had promised to get up another opposition, declared, but was prevented by ill health from canvassing personally. Shortly before the nomination he withdrew, citing the ‘unprepared state of the registry’ and his unwillingness to mount ‘a mere angry display of resistance’. Only a ‘closer attention to the registry’, he contended, ‘will enable the friends of the independence of the county’ to ‘reassert their rights’ and elect ‘one of their own representatives’. Forbes and Fetherston were returned unopposed.
At the 1826 general election Forbes, whom the Catholic press praised as ‘a liberal and emancipator’, and Fetherston, whom they denounced ‘as the reverse’, offered again. Talk of an opposition to the ‘Orange Fetherston’ came to nothing and they were returned unopposed, the Dublin Evening Post lamenting that if ‘certain individuals’ had ‘been aware of the position now taken by the Catholic clergy of Ireland with respect to ... general election[s], a gentleman of great worth and eminence’ might have opposed Fetherston, against whom ‘measures’ would now ‘be taken for the next occasion’.
Two months before the 1830 general election Anthony Lefroy, eldest son of Thomas Langlois Lefroy* of Carrickglass, near Longford, began to solicit support. On 22 June Charles Fox, whose father commanded the Longford militia from Fox Hall, urged his kinsman Henry Maxwell, Member for county Cavan, not to ‘assist Lefroy’s views in Longford’, as he was ‘most anxious that Lord Forbes should hold his seat and the gentlemen of my native county should return one Member’. Lady Rosse, he explained, had ‘long supported’ the return of Fetherston and Forbes, but
she now gives her second votes, without any previous intimation to Forbes, to Lefroy, her granddaughter’s husband [despite] Lefroy not possessing one acre in the county and not having one of the gentry of the county to support him. She takes advantage of our defective registry, we not suspecting her intentions, and she pushes for a second man ... [which] rouses the feelings of any man of independence in the county. The duke of Leinster’s family would not attempt it in Kildare, nor would the Farnham family in Cavan. I have done all I could by going amongst the Longford gentry and I will keep open the county. Lefroy I know and approve of everything I have seen of him, but ... would you think it handsome of a man ... to canvass during the sitting Member’s absence in Parliament [and] by letter and personal application directly and indirectly to solicit ... the votes of landlords who oppose him?
Farnham mss 18613 (4).
On 21 July Fox chaired a Longford meeting of the ‘friends of independence’, at which £2,455 was subscribed towards Forbes’s re-election, including £500 from White, and resolutions were passed against the ‘influence of a powerful family in their county’ being ‘unduly exerted’.
A petition for repeal of the Union reached the Commons, 6 Dec. 1830.
Both Members continued to oppose the English reform bill, but only Lefroy was present to vote against the Irish measure, by which 39 leaseholders were added to the freeholders, who had increased by the end of 1832 to 1,294 (951 registered at £10, 112 at £20 and 192 at £50).
Registered freeholders: 1562 in 1829; 367 in 1830
